ArAcne
LEX27–28Lexia 27-28 |Lexia
Rivista di semioticaJournal of semiotics
iSSN 1720-5298-21
euro 35,00
ISBN 978-88-255-0876-5
27–28
aspettualità / a
spectuality
aSpettuaLità aSpectuaLity
a cura diMassimo Leone
aspettualitàaspectuality
L’oggetto tradizionale della semiotica, il segno, deriva da una selezione. Il lato signifi-cante del segno non riproduce mai semplicemente quello significato, ma piuttosto ne individua un aspetto. “aspetto” (dal latino “aspicere”, “guardare”) etimologicamente designa ciò che appare, ciò che si presenta agli occhi, così come il modo in cui siffat-ta presentazione avviene. In inglese, “aspect” entra nella lingua verso la fine del XIV secolo come termine astrologico, il quale indica la posizione relativa dei pianeti per come appaiono dalla terra (ossia: come si “guardano” a vicenda). L’aspetto in semioti-ca è qualsiasi cosa spinga la realtà a convertirsi in significazione “sotto qualche rispet-to”. La parola “rispetto”, notoriamente scelta da Peirce nella sua definizione canoni-ca di segno, può essere considerata come una variante cognitiva della parola “aspet-to”. Se “aspetto” è un particolare modo di guardare alle cose, “rispetto” è un partico-lare modo di pensarvi. il rispetto è la controparte interna dell’aspetto. L’aspetto è la controparte esterna del rispetto. tuttavia entrambe si riferiscono allo stesso proces-so: il significato deriva da una selezione, e l’atto del guardare ne è modello e più preci-pua metafora. Se “aspetto” (e, più precisamente in Peirce, “rispetto”) è una caratteri-stica generale di ogni dinamica semiotica, “aspettualità” ne è nel contempo un ogget-to e un’area di investigazione tradizionalmente focalizzata in un particolare dominio (si potrebbe dire: “un aspetto dell’aspetto”): il tempo.
contributi di / contributions by Miguel ariza, Sémir Badir, amir Biglari, Marco celentano, alessandra chiappori, Fátima aparecida dos Santos, Roberto Flores, Vincenzo Idone Cassone, Giusy Gallo, Alice Giannitrapani, Massimo Leone, Giovanni Manetti, Gabriele Marino, Alessandro Mazzei, Mariacarla Mole, Paola Pennisi, Diana Luz pessoa de Barros, Francesca polacci, Julia ponzio, alessandro prato, Nathalie Roelens, Simona Stano, Mattia Thibault, Stefano Traini, Andrea Valle, Ugo Volli.
In copertinaClessidra multipla, Venezia, seconda metà del Settecento, collezione privata.
LEXIA. RIVISTA DI SEMIOTICA
LEXIA. JOURNAL OF SEMIOTICS
-
Direzione / Direction
Ugo Volli
Comitato di consulenza scientifica / Scientific committee
Fernando AndachtKristian BankovPierre–Marie BeaudeDenis BertrandOmar Calabrese †Marcel DanesiRaúl DorraRuggero EugeniGuido FerraroJosé Enrique FinolBernard JacksonEric LandowskiGiovanni ManettiDiego MarconiGianfranco MarroneIsabella PezziniRoland PosnerMarina SbisàMichael SilversteinDarcilia SimõesFrederik StjernfeltPeeter ToropEero TarastiPatrizia Violi
Redazione / Editor
Massimo Leone
Editori associati di questo numero /Associated editors of this issueLuca Acquarelli, Elvira Arnoux, Cinzia Bianchi, Lu-cia Corrain, Giovanna Cosenza, Cristina Demaria, Ruggero Eugeni, Luis García Fanlo, Riccardo Fasso-ne, Jean–Marie Iacono, Tarcisio Lancioni, Francesco Mangiapane, Federico Montanari, Simone Natale, Paolo Peverini, Isabella Pezzini, Jenny Ponzo, Laura Rolle, Franciscu Sedda, Elsa Soro, Lucio Spaziante, Eero Tarasti, Stefano Traini, Patrizia Violi
Sede legale / Registered Office
CIRCE “Centro Interdipartimentaledi Ricerche sulla Comunicazione”con sede amministrativa pressol’Università di TorinoDipartimento di Filosofiavia Sant’Ottavio, 2010124 TorinoInfo: [email protected]
Registrazione presso il Tribunale di Torino n. 4 del 26 febbraio 2009
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I edizione: giugno 2017ISBN 978-88-255-0876-5ISSN 1720-5298-20
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Lexia Rivista di semiotica
Lexia. Rivista di semiotica, –Aspettualità
Lexia. Journal of Semiotics, –Aspectuality
a cura diedited by
Massimo Leone
Contributi di
Miguel ArizaSémir BadirAmir Biglari
Marco CelentanoAlessandra Chiappori
Fátima Aparecida dos SantosRoberto Flores
Vincenzo Idone CassoneGiusy Gallo
Alice GiannitrapaniMassimo Leone
Giovanni ManettiGabriele Marino
Alessandro MazzeiMariacarla Mole
Paola PennisiDiana Luz Pessoa de Barros
Francesca PolacciJulia Ponzio
Alessandro PratoNathalie Roelens
Simona StanoMattia ThibaultStefano Traini
Andrea ValleUgo Volli
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I edizione: giugno
Indice / Table of Contents
Prefazione / PrefaceMassimo Leone
Part ITeorie / Theories
Time and Meaning. A Cultural Semiotics of Temporal andAspectual IdeologiesMassimo Leone
L’aspettualità nella lingua. Marcature morfologiche ed effettidi soggettivitàGiovanni Manetti
L’aspectualisation en sémiotique. Histoires et perspectivesDiana Luz Pessoa de Barros
Imperfectividad y final del relatoRoberto Flores
Note de synthèse sur l’aspectualité spatialeSémir Badir
Sémiotique de l’hésitationNathalie Roelens
Hacia una topología aspectual de sucesosMiguel Ariza
L’aspetto come processo d’informazione. Il rapporto fra cosae oggetto nel pensiero di Peirce (–)Julia Ponzio
Indice / Table of Contents
Part IIAnalisi / Analyses
Sarò che sarò. La paradossale aspettualità dell’Eterno nellaBibbia ebraicaUgo Volli
From the historical Jesus to Jesus deified. Discourse strategiesof temporalization and aspectualization in the Letters of Paul,the Gospels and ActsStefano Traini
L’ipotiposi retorica. Il far vedere e l’effetto di presenzaAlessandro Prato
L’aspectualité du deuil et du désespoir dans Les Contemplationsde Victor HugoAmir Biglari
Occhio, mente, scrittura. Appunti per uno studio dell’aspettualitàspaziale in CalvinoAlessandra Chiappori
Fotografare, scolpire, filmare. Questioni aspettuali nella traduzioneintersemioticaFrancesca Polacci
Doubt. Analisi della messa in scena di un dubbioMariacarla Mole
Sub Specie Ludi. Aspettualità e aspettualizzazioni nel giocoMattia Thibault
Apeiron. Dinamiche aspettuali di una forma narrativa contem-poraneaVincenzo Idone Cassone
Nuovo, vecchio e soprattutto di nuovo. Riprese, persistenze epresenze nella popular music degli anni DuemilaGabriele Marino
Osservati mentre facciamo shopping. Analisi della pratica diconsumo su Amazon.itGiusy Gallo
Indice / Table of Contents
Gli “aspetti” del cibo. Meditazioni semiotiche su gusto edisgustoSimona Stano
Dal cane–cibo al dog restaurant. Giochi aspettuali nella dialet-tica alimentare uomo/animaleAlice Giannitrapani
Mente incarnata e linguaggio. La dimensione aspettuale nellacognizione autisticaPaola Pennisi
Aspectualidade e cidade. Um recorte da relação tempo e es-paço como gêneseFátima Aparecida dos Santos
Sapir–Whorf vs Boas–Jakobson. Enunciation and the Semi-otics of Programming LanguagesAndrea Valle, Alessandro Mazzei
L’aspetto della nazione. Divenire, tempo e storia in un casodi negazione nazionaleFranciscu Sedda
Part IIIRecensioni / Reviews
Arts and Humanities in Progress. A Manifesto of Numanities, diD. MartinelliMarco Celentano
Note biografiche degli autori / Authors’ Bionotes
Lexia. Rivista di semiotica, 27–28AspettualitàISBN 978-88-255-0876-5DOI 10.4399/97888255087651pag. 9–13 (giugno 2017)
Prefazione / Preface
M L*
The sign, which is the traditional object of semiotics, stems from aselection. The signifying side of the sign never simply reproduces thesignified one but singles out an aspect of it. “Aspect” (from the Latin“aspicere”, “to look at”) etymologically designates what appears, whatpresents itself to the eyes, as well as the way in which this presentationtakes place. In English, “aspect” enters the language in the late th
century as an astrological term, indicating the relative position ofthe planets as they appear from earth (i.e., how they ‘look at’ oneanother).
Generally speaking, the aspect in semiotics is everything thatpushes reality to turn into signification “in some respect”. The word“respect”, famously chosen by Peirce in his canonical definition of thesign, may be regarded as a cognitive variant of the word “aspect”. If“aspect” is a particular way of looking at things, “respect” is a particu-lar way of thinking of things. The respect is the inward counterpartof the aspect. The aspect is the outward counterpart of the respect.Both, however, refer to the same process: meaning derives from se-lection, and looking is the model and utmost metaphor of it. Peirce’sdistinction between “dynamic object” and “immediate object” couldnot make sense without involving some form of aspect or respect.Indeed, most interpreters of Peirce describe the immediate object notas some additional object distinct from the dynamic one but merelyas some “informationally incomplete facsimile of the dynamic objectgenerated at some interim stage in a chain of signs” (Stanford Encyclo-pedia of Philosophy). The fact that this “facsimile” is incomplete is theconsequence of the fact that some cognitive and cultural forces shape
∗ University of Turin.
Prefazione / Preface
the sign into the result of a series of aspects and respects, highlightingcertain qualities of the dynamic object while playing down or simplyignoring some other qualities.
If “aspect” (and, more precisely in Peirce, “respect”) is a generalfeature of any semiotic dynamic, “aspectuality” is both an object andan area of investigation that has traditionally focused on one particulardomain of it (“an aspect of the aspect”, one might say): time. Of allthe categories of dynamic objects that undergo their transformationinto immediate objects through selection of an aspect, time is the onethat most attracted the attention of scholars. Early reflection on verballanguage encouraged linguists to maintain that words do not limitthemselves to represent the time of reality, distinguishing betweenwhat occurs before and what occurs after, but also to represent thistime from a particular point of view, as though projecting a ‘verbaleye’ into the linguistic depiction of reality. Already the Indian linguistYaska (ca. th century BCE) dealt with this feature of verbal language,distinguishing actions that are processes (bhava), from those wherethe action is considered as a completed whole (murta). The obser-vation that many verbal languages contain mechanisms that enablespeakers to represent the time of an action according to differentaspects of it has led to the development of a specific area of linguisticstudy, that of “grammatical aspect”, which considers the aspect as agrammatical category that expresses how an action, event, or state,denoted by a verb, extends over time. Traditionally, scholars distin-guish among different aspects depending on how they represent thelasting of a process (durative or punctual), its completion (perfectiveor imperfective), the stage of it (inchoative, intermediate, terminative),its potential iteration (singular, iterative, cyclical), etc. Although mostreflection on the grammatical aspect concerns verbs, scholars havelong realized that the qualities of the time of reality can be verballyrendered also through other semantic means, including adverbs orspecific lexical choices.
Since its inception, the study of aspectuality was carried on for boththeoretical and practical means. On the one hand, it is abstractedlyinteresting to find out how each language (underlain by a specificlinguistic ideology) provides speakers with a series of options as re-gards the representation of the temporal qualities of reality. On theother hand, it was soon evident to scholars that choice among these
Prefazione / Preface
options often results in a rhetorical effect: verbally casting light on aprocess so as to highlight its initial, terminal, complete, incomplete,etc. character is often a means to lead the receiver and interpreter tospecific pragmatic conclusions. To give an example, contemporaryonline journalism often adopts an aspectuality of emotions that isdiametrically different from that of classical ‘paper journalism’; socialnetworks are full of expressions such as “you’ll be outraged whenyou’ll realize what the politician X said”, inviting the reader to clickon the often enticing image attached to the message. Such and similarexpressions vehicle and simultaneously provoke a receptive dynam-ics in which prejudiced emotional reaction to the facts precedes thecognitive awareness of them (readers are led to be outraged beforeknowing what they are outraged about, somehow relying on the “out-rage deposit” that sits in society and that is automatically activatedthrough fiduciary adhesion to the journalist’s proposed interpretiveframework).
The centrality of aspects and respects in the definition itself of thesign, both in Peirce’s and Saussure’s tradition, the accumulation ofinsights on verbal aspects in the history of grammar, and the studyof aspectuality in structural linguistics have given rise, in contem-porary semiotics, to a specific interest for aspectual dynamics. Thisinterest has manifested itself on two different but intertwined levels.On a more specific level, semiotics, and especially the Greimassianschool, has focused on the narrative implications of aspectuality. In theGreimassian model — substantially in keeping with the previous andparallel linguistic literature — aspectuality is an over–determinationof “temporalization”, that is, the construction, through enunciation,of the temporal framework in which the action of narration is situatedand imaginarily takes place. Indeed, while in most Indo–Europeanlanguages temporalization consists in the narrative projection of apresent, a past, or a future, aspectualization specifies such projectionby focusing on a specific aspect of it. To give an example, in Italianas well as in other Romance languages, sport journalists characteris-tically do not relate soccer actions (which have already occurred inthe past, and are therefore complete) through perfective verbal forms(“al trentesimo minuto del primo tempo, il giocatore ha passato ilpallone”, “at the thirtieth minute of the first half, the player passed(or “has passed”) the ball”), but bizarrely adopting imperfective verbal
Prefazione / Preface
forms (“al trentesimo minuto del primo tempo, il giocatore passava ilpallone”; “at the thirtieth minute of the first half, the player would passthe ball”). The pragmatic effect of this aspectual distortion consistsin transmitting to receivers the feeling that the soccer action, albeitby definition complete, is still going on under their eyes as if in slowmotion, empowering, hence, the evocative ability of the journalist’sdiscourse.
It is precisely in order to account for these rhetorical effects thatGreimassian semiotics developed a systematic study of narrative aspec-tualization. At the same time, in accordance with Saussure’s ambitionto conceive semiology as a generalization of linguistics, Greimassiansemioticians have also explored the second level of investigation onaspectuality, considering whether the analytical framework elaboratedso as to explain temporal aspectuality could be generalized in orderto explicate also non–temporal forms of aspectuality, such as ‘spatialaspectuality’, for instance. In the Greimassian school, such generaliza-tion of the study of temporal aspectuality took place mainly throughthe introduction of the so called “observer actant”. As is well known,the Greimassian school conceives meaning as essentially stemmingfrom cultural oppositions that find their expression in narrative forms.Relying on previous intuitions by Propp, Lévi–Strauss, and others,Greimas analyzed narratives as structures characteristically composedby a certain number of narrative roles or “actants” (subject, object,sender, receiver, adjuvant, and opponent). Thus, meaning in societycirculates through stories in which the correspondent value, embod-ied in an object, is pursued by a subject encouraged by a sender andsanctioned by a receiver, helped by an adjuvant and contrasted byan opponent (this latter often being at the service of the parallel butinverse narrative program of an anti–subject). Subsequent followers ofthe Greimassian school, however, and in particular Jacques Fontanille,realized that, so as to fully account for this narrative structure, a fur-ther actant should be introduced in it, a sort of ‘abstract eye’ thatobserves the action of the story by focusing on a particular aspect ofit. Changing the perspective of this “observer actant”, the rhetoricalmeaning of a narrative can be substantially altered.
In an epoch in which both global and local representations of timeand space seem to undergo a dramatic shifting, Lexia, the internationaljournal for semiotics published by CIRCE, the Center for Interdisci-
Prefazione / Preface
plinary Research on Communication at the University of Turin, Italy,devotes a monographic issue to the semiotics of aspectuality. Theessays contained in the present volume deal with either (or both) ofthe two levels mentioned above: on the one hand, articles inquireinto the specific semiotics of temporal aspectuality, focusing on theway in which the various kinds of present or past discourse representand rhetorically shape the receiver’s interpretation of action in time.On the other hand, articles seek to extend the semiotic frameworkfor the study of temporal aspectuality into different and broader do-mains, concerning the aspectuality of space or that of non–verballanguages. The traditional division between theoretical and analyticalapproach has been adopted, in this monographic issue, so as to createto broad sections of essays. The themes they deal with include: thehistory of reflection on aspectuality in linguistics and/or semiotics;relations, similarities, and differences between the linguistic and thesemiotic analysis of aspectuality; the notions of “respect” and “dy-namic/immediate object” in C.S.S. Peirce; the analytical frameworkof temporal and non–temporal aspectuality in the Greimassian schoolof semiotics; the notion of “observer actant”; the rhetoric of aspectu-ality in old and/or new media; aspectuality in non–verbal discourses(music, visual communication, gestural languages, etc.); aspectualideologies in cultural semiotics, focusing on the prevalence of suchor such ‘aspectual regime’ in specific societies and cultures; specificaspectual ‘figures’: beginnings, conclusions, reiterations, completions,incompleteness, durations, instantaneity, etc.; specific moral or reli-gious connotations of aspectual representations (genesis, apocalypse,rebirth, eternal return, catastrophe, etc.).
Several of the essays included in the volume were first presented inthe advanced doctoral seminar of semiotics “Meetings on Meaning”(“Incontri sul Senso”), directed by Massimo Leone at the Universityof Turin in the academic year /. All essays in the collection,however, underwent double blind peer reviewing.
Both the abovementioned seminar and the present publicationhave been possible thanks to a research grant of the University ofTurin, Department of Philosophy and Educational Sciences (RILO).